Today we are talking to a talented writer and journalist who has penned the definitive book on the hottest UK crossover TV series of the new millennium, the early 20th century-set family period drama DOWNTON ABBEY, with her estimable new tome, now available, THE CHRONICLES OF DOWNTON ABBEY: A NEW ERA - Jessica Fellowes. Discussing many of the most alluring aspects of the hit Brit series, especially insofar as an international audience is concerned and how the show appeals to those of all ages and classes, as well as adding even more historical, political and social insight into the proceedings on the show over the course of its run so far, Fellowes and I assess many of the most arresting moments of the three seasons of the series as well as the comprehensive behind-the-scenes look that she provides (along with Matthew Sturgis) in THE CHRONICLES OF DOWNTON ABBEY: A NEW ERA. All of that, discussion of the third season of the series which premieres in the US on PBS January 6, speculations on what we may see in Season Four, first news on Jessica's uncle Julian's new historical series for NBC, THE GUILDED AGE - and much, much more!
PC: Iain Glen's character as Lady Mary's former fiancé stood as a pseudo-metaphor for the newspaper industry today in many ways, it appeared - after all, news has changed so much in the last ten years, has it not? What are your thoughts on that?
JF: Yeah, I know - that's really interesting. But, you know, you still do have people reading newspapers anyway! I think that our period will be very interesting to people a hundred years from now to look back on because of all the changes going on now. You know, someday there will be a series about the goings-on at a house in 2012 and all that happens to the people who live there. Some read newspapers still and others say, "What are you doing? Get up with the times already!" [Laughs.] Imagine trying to write DOWNTON ABBEY 2012 in a hundred years' time. Who would be your main characters? How would you depict life now? Hmm.PC: An intriguing idea.JF: I think we sometimes have a tendency to patronize people or characters on the show - "Oh, you were born into this job," or, "Oh, you were born into this position," and I think that it is much more complicated than that. I think that that is what Julian really tries to get across - just because someone may be a butler doesn't mean that they think along certain lines. People are people - with broken hearts and childhoods and families and all that goes with it. It's great drama and great dramatic tension to show all of that, but, also, at the same time, it shows us what our grandparents went through at that time, so it's a great history lesson, too. Really, they were us, just on a different stage and just with different surroundings. PC: And Shirley MacLaine's character now represents our American grandparents.JF: Exactly! Exactly. That's exactly right.PC: Are you aware that first lady Michelle Obama has stated DOWNTON ABBEY is her favorite TV series?JF: Yes! We are all very aware of that - it's thrilling. Actually, that information got leaked to us a while back that she was a big fan, so we all thought that was just so splendid. I actually mailed her a signed copy of the book with a note, as well, so I hope that she gets it. I thought it was so nice she said that about the show, though. PC: The recent riots in the UK mirror the rally attended by Lady Sybil in some ways. The episode aired not too long after, I believe. Is there a connection there, do you think?JF: That's quite interesting you say that - I am not sure that anybody here even made that connection! But, again, that was a period of great transition just like it is now, so there was a lot of political upheaval and demonstrations. The recent riots here were not seen as organized political activity, though - we see it as it was a very unfortunate series of incidents that was sparked off by sort of a summer of desperate people during a depression.PC: How would you compare the demonstration such as that shown on DOWNTON to what we have on these shores with Occupy Wall Street and protests of that sort?JF: Well, I think that with all of it you have to realize that England is much smaller and more contained in general, so it is like an incubator for that sort of thing - America is much more spread out and open. So, I think it's harder for a national political activity to happen there on that sort of widespread scale.PC: Is the death of a character in childbirth a metaphor for the death of the old ways and birth of the new ways, perchance?JF: Well, I am going to be very careful about spoilers, but I think it could be interpreted that way. Although, I think that she is the new in a way - especially given her relationship with Branson and so on - and so I think it is more about war and the cost of it, with the death of the old ways coming at the cost of so many young lives; very young lives. [Pause.] But, I don't know for sure if that was a metaphor of Julian's, though, for that particular storyline. PC: How do you perceive that upstairs/downstairs relationship? In America at the time it was totally accepted - as Shirley MacLaine's character humorously relates.JF: Yeah, I think that she looks on it being not that outrageous because she doesn't believe in judging someone based on where they born and who their parents were, but, on the other hand - and we talk about this in the book, as well - given her predisposition, she would probably be more circumspect about an outsider than anybody. You know, there were quite a lot of stories in the papers at the time about rich, young American heiresses running off with their drivers or what have you and it ending quite badly for them. So, I think she would have been as concerned as anybody about her granddaughter being involved with Branson. But, I don't think it's about roles as much as it is about tribes and trust - it's about whether or not someone understands where we have come from and where we are going in life and all that. You don't necessarily have to be of the same class to share that, though - it's about having a common point of reference, if you can. So, I think that that is the cause of the tension for a lot of that storyline in the family. We still make those kind of judgments today, I think.PC: Lady Edith and Sir Anthony have a fascinating dynamic - "an old crippled man" who doesn't want to steal her youth. First, though: what about his huge mansion?!JF: I know! Isn't that house just amazing? I don't know where it is, actually, though, but it is incredibly pretty, isn't it? That relationship is fascinating; yes - I agree. With the wedding and everything, you see how she could have been content in that house with everything there - I mean, just look at it! But, it's interesting that the dowager countess disagrees and thinks it isn't enough. You know, they are of the same class - Sir Antony and the Crawleys - and I think that Sir Anthony was most worried Lord Grantham would think he had made his young daughter a nursemaid and it wasn't a relationship based on love. You have to remember that the big thing then was that you couldn't get divorced - there was no way out once you got into the marriage. So, a lot of it was about arranging what you wanted beforehand, otherwise you would be tied to someone and you would be stuck in this unhappy relationship forever. Marriage is never simple, but there is that feeling now that there is a way out and they didn't really have that option back then, so the father of a daughter entering a marriage would want to make sure to line up as many things as possible to make sure that that marriage was a success. PC: As Lord Grantham is wont to do, even for Edith and Anthony - or not, as the case may be.JF: Right. I think that for [Lord Grantham] there was a feeling of, you know, "Is she really in love with him or does she just need to get out more?" [Laughs.]PC: And what about Patrick - was he really the soldier in Season Two or was that an intruder do you think?JF: I know, right?! We never really find out, do we? I think that's deliberate on Julian's part.PC: Have you discussed that with him in any detail? Will we see Patrick someday, whether again or for the first time?JF: Well, I don't know for sure! I think that is one of the more fun storylines in Series 2, though - you know, "Did he really come back or is someone pretending to be him?" Also, I thought that it was really nice for Edith to get a little bit of unrequited love - it's such a sort of hopeless character otherwise. [Laughs.]PC: Too true!JF: But, she had a moment where she could feel desirable and that someone would want her, even if he is some horribly bandaged, scarred character. [Laughs.]PC: Lady Edith has it rough.JF: I thought it was sort of sweet, though, that relationship. I wonder if Patrick will be back, too, though.PC: That real life incident with Laura Carmichael and Sir Peter Hall recently was so bizarre - catcalling her while she was performing onstage and all of that.JF: Yes, it is quite strange, isn't it? I believe he has issued an apology since, though. Apparently, she was quite brilliant and just kept on acting, at any rate. He is quite an old man now, so perhaps he had fallen asleep and got a shock and thought he was somewhere else or something. [Laughs.] PC: Rumor is Dan Stevens will not be returning for Season Four. JF: I think that people wanted to see him and it would have been really good, and, given what happened in Season Three I thought he'd be crazy not to do it... but I just don't know. PC: The writer is undoubtedly the king on DOWNTON ABBEY - in this case, Julian - and it seems that it shares that prime authorial placement with theatre in that regard.JF: I think that is one of the genius things that makes the show so successful is that Julian is the main creator, doing all the scripts by himself - everything. He has been such a major part of it and that's something that the actors all enjoy, too, I think, in getting every script by him - they know it is his voice. I think it's a really wonderful cast - you have these great names like Maggie Smith and Jim Carter and Hugh Bonneville and Phyllis Logan; they have been doing it a long time and they enjoy the classical nature of the work and the team that they are with; they are very relaxed, comfortable and all quite charming. Then, you have the younger actors, many of whom were virtual unknowns when they started on the show - it's been a massive break for all of them and they find it very exciting, so they have all bonded together over it. They are so full of excitement and life. So, together, there is a real feeling of a company of actors, I think - they are all good friends and they get along quite well and I think that's important to have when you are telling a story like this about a family.PC: No Shirley MacLaine versus Maggie Smith DYNASTY cat fight homages, then?JF: [Laughs.] No DYNASTY. Seriously, though, they have such huge respect for each other and they are such grand dames in real life anyway. Their scenes together in Series Three are just great and you really get to see them playing off of each other so well - you just don't know which to watch.PC: It's a shame MacLaine did not return for the Christmas episode this year.JF: Yes, but you have to remember that it was a big thing to come over back then - it was a little before planes, so you couldn't just pop over whenever you wished it. But, it's not long before the planes start going between America and the UK, so perhaps by Season Four she will be able to hop a flight over. I know for a fact that the production just loved having her around - I can tell you that. PC: It will be a welcome return whenever she shows up again. Did you get to speak to her onset?JF: Yes. I interviewed her, actually, and one thing I found amusing was that she said she loved filming the dinner scenes in particular - now, most people hate filming those!PC: Why so?JF: Well, they take twelve hours and you have to sit there for so long eating this increasingly congealing food, you know? [Laughs.]PC: Not too appetizing.JF: Definitely not! But, she said that she loved filming those scenes because it was so much fun to be with everyone in one scene together. So, she was regaling the whole cast with great Hollywood stories and entertaining everybody - she was a lot of fun to have onset.PC: So, how about Michael Caine on the show in the future, then?JF: I don't know! I don't know! I see all these interviews now with people volunteering to do cameos on the show. I think that in America you know Maggie Smith, but not a lot of the other actors - Maggie Smith is the biggest name, but there are other names, too, here, in the show - but, because of that and the fact that there are so many unknowns, the characters just sort of leap off of the screen, I think. Also, I think that if you have too many big names in small roles it can ruin your concentration slightly as a viewer. You know, "Oh, it's so-and-so as the waiter!" I think that they are most concerned with it being an authentic piece of drama, so they want to take it seriously as much as possible - of course there is a sense of humor about it all, too, but they want the characters all given equal weight and if there are too many stars added it might outbalance it. For all I know, though, Adele will be singing the DOWNTON ABBEY theme next year! [Laughs.]PC: And Dan Stevens will be replaced with Daniel Craig!JF: [Big Laugh.] Exactly! Exactly. PC: Do you suppose we will see the Crawleys in the US for a spell come Season Four?JF: Oh, that would be brilliant! That would be great - I think we would be very interested to see that here, as well. The contrast is so great - I mean, the Crawley family is rich by British standards of the time, but nothing by American standards. The first world war drained a lot of European finances, but America had not spent all of its money on armaments and warfare in the first world war, so they came out of it better off. But, yeah - taking the Crawleys over to America would be quite something. I think it would seem even bigger and even better in many ways to them.PC: What can you tell me about Julian's new NBC series, THE GUILDED AGE?JF: Well, I think that it is an amazing, amazing premise for a show and that it is just a brilliant time in New York. I have spoken to him briefly about it just to confirm that it is indeed happening and he said "Yes, it is," and he is working on the pilot right now, actually. [Pause.] I mean, I went to New York recently and I looked around at the buildings and I thought, "Who was building them back then?" And, when you start to think about it, it's an enormous undertaking - buildings like that were not going up anywhere else at the time; it must have involved some egos to take on something that massive.PC: And then some!JF: But, yeah - I think there is a lot of excitement about that project and it will be exciting to see what happens with it.PC: Lastly: have you and your uncle Julian discussed his screen adaptation of GYPSY that he is working on with Barbra Streisand?
JF: No. I am not fortunate enough to be a part of that inner circle. [Laughs.] He is just such a prolific writer that sometimes it is hard to keep tabs on everything Julian is doing at any given time, though. I will ask him about it next time I see it now that you have mentioned it!PC: This book is simply marvelous in every way and I wish you all the best, Jessica. JF: Oh, thank you so much, Pat. It's been really nice talking to you. Bye.
Photo Credit: Harper Collins, ITV, etc.
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